Printed word learning in beginning readers |
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Authors: | Pieter Reitsma |
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Affiliation: | Paedologisch Instituut The Netherlands |
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Abstract: | Three experiments using beginning Dutch readers (7 and 8 years of age) as subjects provide evidence that visually recognizing the unique graphemic structure of words is an important component in word identification, even at rather early stages in learning to read. Only a moderate amount of practice in reading strings of letters was necessary for young children to read the regular spelling faster than an altered spelling that preserved the word sound. In normal beginners this effect appeared regardless of their ability to identify the words the first time; in learning-disabled children, matched in overall reading speed, learning about the graphemic compositions of words seems to proceed at a much slower rate. The results are discussed with regard to the importance of building accurate graphemic entries in the mental lexicon for acquiring fluency in reading. |
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Keywords: | Requests for reprints should be sent to P. Reitsma Paedologisch Instituut Koningslaan 22 1075 AD Amsterdam The Netherlands. |
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